According
to CBS Evening News host Katie Couric on Thursday, the censure of
Charles Rangel was "painful" for "everyone watching" and a "fall from
grace." Reporter Nancy Cordes also tried to find the "silver lining" in
the Congressman's reelection.

Cordes sympathetically recounted, "It was a shaken Speaker Pelosi who
read the resolution censuring her longtime ally, 80-year-old Charles
Rangel, as he stood in the well of the House." Apparently asserting a
universal emotion, Couric proclaimed, "It was painful for him and for everyone watching."

In closing a report on the subject, Cordes seemed to put the best
possible spin on the fact that Rangel is only the 23 House member in the
history of the United States to be censured: "If there is a silver
lining for Mr. Rangel, it's that this two-and-a-half year ordeal is now
over. There are no criminal charges against him and he easily won
reelection last month."

The two other evening newscasts, NBC's Nightly News and ABC's World
News both recounted the story without such drama and hyperbolic
language.

This isn't the first time that network journalists have found sadness
in the fall of Democratic Congressman. The June 6, 1994 issue of the
Media Research Center's Notable Quotables [1]highlighted the "American tragedy" of Dan Rostenkowski, convicted of mail fraud:

"You're a fierce partisan on the other side of the aisle from Dan
Rostenkowski, but you're also an admirer of good legislators. How do you
feel about this personally? Is this an American tragedy?"

"It's a big loss for the President. It's a big loss for the Congress, and I think it's a big loss for the country."

- NBC reporter Lisa Myers, Today, May 25, 1994.

A transcript of the December 2 segment, which aired at 6:30pm EST, follows:

6:30PM TEASE

KATIE COURIC: Tonight, fall from grace.

NANCY PELOSI: The House has resolved that Representative Charles Rangel of New York be censured.

6:30PM SEGMENT

COURIC:
It was painful for him and for everyone watching. Veteran Congressman
Charles Rangel was censured today by the House of Representatives
despite his last-minute plea for a lesser punishment for financial
misconduct. Censure is a formal condemnation and the New York Democrat
is the first House member to be censured since 1983, one of 23 in the
history of the nation. Congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes was
there.

NANCY PELOSI: The gentleman from New York, Mr. Rangel, kindly appear in the well

CORDES: It was a shaken Speaker Pelosi who read the resolution
censuring her longtime ally, 80-year-old Charles Rangel, as he stood in
the well of the House.

CHARLES RANGEL: Council and the committee found no evidence at all of corruption, found no evidence of self enrichment.

PETER KING [REP. R-NY]: If expulsion is the equivalent of the death penalty, then censure is life imprisonment-

CORDES: Last month, a House ethics panel found the former Ways and
Means chair guilty of 11 violations, including failing to report
hundreds of thousands in assets, improperly using rent-controlled
apartments in New York, and failing to pay taxes on his villa in the
Dominican Republic for 17 years.

ZOE LOFGREN [REP. D-CA]: It brought discredit to the House when this
member with great responsibility for tax policy did not fully pay his
taxes for many years.

CORDES: Several members, Democrats and Republicans, pleaded that the
punishment be downgraded to a reprimand, the kind of slap on the wrist
Congressman Joe Wilson received after shouting, 'You lie!,' during a
presidential address last year.

G.K. BUTTERFIELD [REP. D-NC]: And I ask you to consider a dozen factors
- his age, 80 years of age, combat military service of three year as a
volunteer, Bronze Star, Purple Heart.

RANGEL: I was wounded and had no thoughts that I would be able to survive.

CORDES: The last time a censure was issued was 27 years ago, to
Republican Daniel Crane of Illinois and Democrat Jerry Studds of
Massachusetts for engaging in sexual relations with teenage
congressional pages.

RANGEL: I brought it on myself, but I still believe that this body has to be guided by fairness.

CORDES: If there is a silver lining for Mr. Rangel, it's that this
two-and-a-half year ordeal is now over. There are no criminal charges
against him and he easily won reelection last month. Katie.

- Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here[2] to follow him on Twitter.[3]

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